"Let no freedom be allowed to novelty, because it is not fitting that any addition should be made to antiquity. Let not the clear faith and belief of our forefathers be fouled by any muddy admixture."
-- Pope Sixtus III

There are two ways to look at Jennifer Love Hewitt's new show, The Client List, in which she plays a woman who takes a job at a massage parlor to support her family when
her husband is unable to work, and may have to turn to prostitution to make ends meet.

The less charitable view is that the delectable JLH's career has jumped the proverbial shark.

I prefer to see The Client List as an indictment of the horrors everyday people face as they sink ever deeper into the moral and economic cesspool that is Obamastan.

If you're really upset about this, you can always watch Heartbreakersagain. That'll fix you right up.

Haven't heard of it? That's not a surprise.

Of all the myriad scandals of the Obama administration, there is one,
largely ignored by the mainstream media, that could actually be its
worst.

That scandal is the operation run from the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, under the Justice Department,
known as "Fast and Furious," through which the federal government
actually encouraged and even ordered American gun shops to sell guns --
against the store owners' better judgment -- to "straw" purchasers who
were funneling guns to Mexican drug gangs while the ATF sat back and
watched and did nothing.

Pavlich
exposes how extreme gun control measures have been a top political goal
for President Obama, Attorney General Eric Holder and other important
leaders within the administration -- and she draws the lines that link
this goal directly to the implementation of Fast and Furious. Just as
importantly, she shows how the administration has shamelessly tried to
obscure those links.

The operation resulted in the murder of
U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry and the murder or wounding of some
200 Mexican citizens.

In the operation, there was no attempt
to track the weapons sold, and some agents who tried to follow the
purchasers were told to stand down. Not only that, but our government
kept Mexican authorities wholly in the dark about the operation.
Allowing these guns to "walk" into Mexico without surveillance and
behind the backs of Mexican authorities guaranteed they would end up in
the hands of Mexican drug cartels and only be recovered after crimes had
been committed, which is exactly what occurred.

As one ATF
agent testified to Congress, "you can't allow thousands of guns to go
south of the border without an expectation that they are going to be
recovered eventually in crimes and people are going to die."

In
their reports on Fast and Furious, congressional investigators
concluded that the Department of Justice "had much greater knowledge of,
and involvement in, Fast and Furious than it has previously
acknowledged." Indeed, Attorney General Holder claimed that he had been
unaware of Fast and Furious until a few weeks before May 3, 2011, but it
was shown that he had received numerous memos about it much earlier,
which he later insisted he had not read.

Rep. Darrell Issa
has said that the DOJ has spent more time and resources trying to
protect the careers of its officials who knew about the operation than
in holding accountable those who were involved. In fact, the evidence
shows that the only ones who have been punished are those who blew the
whistle on the operation, while those who were engaged in wrongdoing
have been rewarded -- reassigned or promoted with their pensions still
intact.

Meanwhile, the DOJ, according to the committee
report, "has blamed everyone except for its political appointees for
Fast and Furious." Ken Melson, then the ATF's acting director, said that
the DOJ is "circling the wagons to protect its political appointees."

Though
Holder told the House Judiciary Committee his office was working
"tirelessly to identify, locate and provide relevant information" to
Congress, Republican representatives and senators say he and his
department have been stonewalling their investigation. Sen. Charles
Grassley said that Justice was withholding some 74,000 pages of relevant
documents from the investigators.

The ongoing investigation
also reveals a disturbing lack of coordination and cooperation among the
ATF, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the FBI, all of which are
under the domain of Holder's DOJ. One deputy attorney general, upon
being confronted with this issue, just casually replied, "We will look
into it."

The committee's report said that everyone involved
was blaming others: The ATF pointed the finger at the Justice Department
for encouraging the operation, and Justice blamed the U.S. attorney's
office in Arizona for implementing it. DOJ officials who could have
stopped the operation blamed their staffs for not bringing critical
facts to their attention. Making matters worse, U.S. attorney's office
personnel have taken the Fifth Amendment in refusing to testify before
Congress, or the DOJ has prohibited them from appearing before Congress
at all.

Katie's book
is a real reporter's book, loaded with interviews with inside sources,
including conscience-stricken government agents who are appalled by the
politicization of the ATF. She quotes ATF agent John Dodson, who says,
"I have never heard an explanation from anyone involved in Operation
Fast and Furious that I believe would justify what we did."

This
book, which is the best reporting yet on the Obama administration's
bloodiest scandal -- and its most unconscionable one -- will make your
blood boil. You should purchase and read it.

Secret Service officials planning a wild night of fun in Colombia did some of their own advanced work last week, booking a party space at the Hotel Caribe before heading out to the night clubs, hotel sources tell ABC News.

As first reported by ABC, the men went to the "Pley Club" brothel, where they drank expensive whiskey and bragged that they worked for President Obama. The men were also serviced by prostitutes at the club.

But the night didn't end there. The men brought women from the Pley Club
back to the hotel and also picked up additional escorts from other
clubs and venues around town, sources tell ABC News.

Eleven officials
were involved and, according to Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, who was
briefed on the misconduct by Secret Service, "twenty or twenty-one women
foreign nationals were brought to the hotel."

ABC has learned that, when booking the party space, the men told hotel staff that they anticipated roughly 30 people.

The following morning there was reportedly a dispute between one of the
women and an official over the amount of money she was owed for spending
the night. A quarrel ensued and the authorities were ultimately called.

The officials' misconduct in Cartagena last week, ahead of the
president's visit for the Summit of the Americas, has already forced
three agents out of their positions.

The Secret Service
announced Wednesday that one supervisor was allowed to retire while
another was "proposed for removal for cause." A third, non-supervisory
employee resigned. The remaining eight Secret Service personnel
allegedly involved remain on administrative leave.

The Secret Service has also widened their investigation of the officials
to include possible drug use during their partying in Cartagena, ABC
News confirmed.

It's either an amusing way to follow the 2012 presidential
campaign, or the death rattle for meaningful political discourse in
America. Either way, top campaign aides to Democratic President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney have taken to Twitter with relish, in daily verbal battles that underscore how negative - and silly - the campaign could be during ...

11. Worst Classic Fast-Food Burger

Burger King Whopper with Cheese760 calories47 g fat (16 g saturated, 1 g trans)1,410 mg sodiumWith 200 more calories than
a McDonald's Big Mac, the Whopper is the clear loser in the battle of the
burger icons. Blame it on the jumbo patty and globs of mayo (160 calories worth
to be exact). And get this: If you add medium fries and a medium coke—a likely
scenario—you're looking at a 1,500-calorie meal. The best way to "have it
your way" at BK? Order a standard cheeseburger and call it a day, or try
Cook This, Not That! Easy 350-Calorie Meals and save calories, time, and cash.

Eat This Instead!Burger King Cheeseburger300 calories14 g fat (6 g saturated, 0 g trans)710 mg sodiumSINISTER SALADS: The Whopper may be bad news for your gut, but some salads are even less healthy! Beware of the 20 Salads Worse Than a Whopper.

10. Worst Burger Kids’ Meal

McDonald’s McDouble Mighty Kids Meal with Fat-Free Chocolate Milk Jug765 calories30 g fat (9.5 g saturated, 1 g trans)1,215 mg sodiumI
applaud McDonald's for
its recent move to offset fries with fruit in all its kids' meals,
but—apple
slices or not—this "mighty" menu option remains the worst children's
choice at the drive-thru. The chain created the Mighty Kids Meal for
"in-be-tweens"
(kids aged 8 to 12). Problem is, it packs more fat and calories than an
adult's
meal should. A standard Happy Meal is plenty of food for your kid—no
matter their age—and chicken nuggets trump burgers any day. (Find
hundreds of
other tips to help your family eat better in Eat This, Not That! For Kids!)

9. Worst Basic Burger

Five Guys Bacon Cheeseburger920 calories62 g fat (29.5 g saturated)1,310 mg sodiumThis burger bomb landed on
the list for one reason: false advertising. At Five Guys, regular burgers are
doubles and "Little" burgers are singles. And the burgers aren't the
only serving size rip-off the chain serves up. The "regular" fries
have 620 calories—double that of most standard fry orders. The takeaway: Go
"Little" or go elsewhere. And for more perpetrators of serving-size
scams, check out the 9 Biggest Serving Size Rip-Offs.

8. Worst “Healthy” Burger

Ruby Tuesday Avocado Turkey Burger 968 calories61 g fat1,601 mg sodiumIt's entirely common for
restaurants to top their turkey burgers with so many greasy calories that they
completely nullify the small savings you get by choosing turkey over beef. Ruby
Tuesday's Avocado Turkey Burger, for example, has more calories than the
chain's Classic Cheeseburger. The lesson: Turkey doesn't always mean healthier.

7. Worst Burger Melt

Red Robin All-American Patty Melt1,254 calories94 g fat1,951 mg sodiumMelts are notoriously high
in calories, thanks to copious amounts of butter and cheese, and Red Robin
takes the diner classic from poor to preposterous by adding 350 calories of
Thousand Island dressing. This "All-American" monstrosity is the
highest-calorie burger on the menu, but unfortunately, the others are close
behind. In fact, the Keep it Simple Burger is the chain's only burger that
falls below 800 calories, which makes it your only sane option.

6. Worst BBQ Burger

Chili’s Shiner Bock BBQ Burger 1,300 calories74 g fat (24 g saturated)2,840 mg sodiumAn average burger at
Chili's packs 1,400 calories, and the Shiner Bock is among the worst of the
lot. The burger's main calorie culprit: crispy onion strings. Last time I
checked, deep-fried onions were a side dish—and a shoddy one at that. This dish
also comes standard with 380 calories of fries, so all said, you're looking at
nearly a day's calories in one sitting. If you want to get your red-meat fix at
Chili's, steak's the only way to go.

5. Worst Sliders

Applebee’s Cheeseburger Sliders with Applewood Smoked Bacon1,340 calories87 g fat (75 g saturated, 3 g trans)2,550 mg sodiumSliders are particularly
sneaky diet traps. First, despite their diminutive stature, they tend to pack
as many—if not more—calories as their full-size brethren. Second, they're often
listed as appetizers, which means you risk wolfing down more than a meal's
worth of calories before you even set eyes on your entrée. My advice: Go with a
leaner appetizer like the Grilled Chicken Wonton Tacos—the only Applebee's
option under 600 calories—and consider sharing with a friend.

2. Worst Fast-Food Burger

Sonic Ring Leader Loaded Burger Double Patty1,660 calories120 g fat (44 g saturated, 4 g trans)1,450 mg sodiumThe recent unveiling of
this menacing half-pound burger marks a new low for a chain that already suffers
from an iffy reputation. The bacon strips and onion rings will receive much of
the criticism, but it's the less flashy components that hold the hidden danger.
In fact, the two slices of cheddar cheese and the double slather of mayo
account for a third of the fat. (Then there's the "bun oil" Sonic
squeezes on.) If you need a burger fix, there are less perilous ways to get it.

1. Worst Burger in America

Chili’s Jalapeño Smokehouse Bacon Burger1,910 calories126 g fat (43 g saturated)5,290 mg sodiumThis tricked-out number is
the worst of the worst of Chili's' burger behemoths. It comes saddled with
tortilla strips, bacon, cheddar, mayo, and jalapeno-ranch dressing, the
combined impact of which is more than 2 days' worth of saturated fat and as
much sodium as you'd find in 6 pounds of McDonald's French fries. No wonder it made our list of the 8 Scariest Restaurant Meals in America!

About Me

First of all, the word is SEX, not GENDER. If you are ever tempted to use the word GENDER, don't. The word is SEX! SEX! SEX! SEX! For example: "My sex is male." is correct.
"My gender is male." means nothing. Look it up.
What kind of sick neo-Puritan nonsense is this? Idiot left-fascists, get your blood-soaked paws off the English language. Hence I am choosing "male" under protest.